Redefining the Core

Joan ArnoldJanuary 2, 20158

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A woman referred by a yoga colleague came to me for an Alexander
Technique lesson, hoping to relieve her agonizing neck and shoulder
pain. I began by explaining Alexander’s central concept: release your
neck to free the spine and relieve the shoulders. Then I stepped back to
consider her overall stance. Though she had what might be considered
"good" posture, I noticed a strange contraction in the front of her
torso.

"What are you doing with your abdominals?" I asked.

"Holding them," she replied.

"Well," I said, "let them go."

She did. Her torso did not collapse without that alleged "support."
After her first and, as it turned out, only lesson, her acute shoulder
pain disappeared. What does this show? 1) A symptom may be far from its
cause and 2) a flawed concept of abdominal support can be damaging.

Such a quick resolution is rare. Usually, in a private Alexander session
or yoga class, we are on a quest to change neuromuscular habits bit by
bit, refining awareness, unraveling tension and marshaling the body’s
inherent postural support.

Many students pat themselves just above the navel and say, "I’ve got to
strengthen my core," with a vague idea of what that means. There are
legions in the fields of physical conditioning and performance who will
tell you that maintaining a conscious contraction in the superficial
abdominals – those we can see and feel – will resolve back pain, foster
better balance and improve posture. But misusing abdominal muscles can
actually compress the spine and increase back pain, send you off
balance, restrict your breath and compress your posture. In a class or
private lesson, I have used the same instruction – let your abdominals
go – to help people resolve sciatica, improve their singing, free their
hip joints and restore full breathing. I don’t mean a slump or a droop,
but the dynamic lengthening that comes from marshaling oppositional
forces throughout the whole body.

Let’s correct some prevalent misconceptions and expand our idea of what
core support really is.

Don’t Hold Anything

You wouldn’t strengthen your biceps by holding them in contraction all
the time, so why do that with your abs? No muscle group should be held.

Muscles work reciprocally, and abdominal muscles work in relation to the
head, neck, back and legs. As you walk, your abdominals – which connect
from the pelvis to the lower ribs – work automatically. It may take some
enlightened instruction to get there, but when you let your abdominals
release and you envision ease and length in your spine, your abs work as
they should.

The body is a marvelously complex creation – easy to move, hard to
understand. Our body’s real function is a dazzling interplay of forces.
As we try to sort out how it works, it’s easy to over-simplify. People
try to stabilize one area rather than coordinate the entire body in
motion. But a little anatomical understanding and some guiding
principles can help you access your torso’s genuine support and truly
enliven your core.

Abdominal Muscles

There are four layers of abdominals:

Rectus abdominis are straight up and down, easily felt on the
front surface of the torso. The goal of crunches is to develop these
into "washboard abs." Washboards – not much in use these days – are
made of metal, a hard substance unlike human tissue. I’m all for
strong abdominals, but they can be strong without being hard.

Oblique abdominals are slanted and come in two layers – internal
and external. They work when you do a yoga twist, when you breathe
and as you walk. They wrap around your torso and go almost all the
way back to the spine.

Transversus abdominis is the deepest of the four layers,
wrapping all the way around the torso, connecting to the
lower spine. Roughly horizontal, transversus helps contain the
internal organs and participate in upright posture.

Core Is So Much More

Let’s keep going, to underlayers you can’t consciously feel or directly
engage, deeper within the body.

Diaphragm – This mushroom-shaped structure at the bottom of the
rib cage is the primary muscle of respiration. It coordinates with
other torso muscles to expel CO2 – the waste product of breath – and
inhale O2, the oxygen we need for survival. You can’t get more
"core" than this. The entire rib cage expands as we inhale and
contracts as we exhale. Allowing your breath to work fully and
easily supports upright posture, calms the mind and conditions torso
muscles – subtly and without effort.

Psoas – You’ll hear this word thrown around a lot in yoga
classes as a problem area. Some – not all – anatomy geeks consider
this part of your core. Psoas expert Liz Koch calls her work
Core Awareness. The full name is iliopsoas. Toward the top, it
connects to the diaphragm and lumbar spine, relates to each breath
we take and helps support upright posture. The "ilio" part coats the
inside of the pelvis. The "psoas" part loops under the thighbone
and, when it contracts, bends the hip joint. It is so central, so
deep, that some consider it a barometer of our emotional state and
level of stress.

Pelvic floor – This web of muscle at the bottom of the torso
helps support the internal organs. A busy intersection devoted to
elimination and sexual activity, it connects to fascia in the body’s
front and back that indirectly link all the way up to the base of
the skull.

Multifidus – Some back muscles – the ones you use when you arch
your back in yoga – are on the torso’s surface. When they engage,
they extend the whole length of the spine. Beneath those big surface
muscles are intermediate layers and, deepest and closest to the
spine are these little ones: multifidus, linking one vertebrae
to another. They support us to stand, sit well and initiate
larger movements. Studies show that to protect the spine from
injury, the multifidus muscles activate before any motion.

The Body Works as a Whole

When you bend your elbow, your biceps work and your triceps release.
When you straighten your arm, the triceps engage. If both are working,
your shoulder and elbow joints will compress. When muscular work is
efficient, one muscle group is active and the opposing group releases.
That release is a neuromuscular function called inhibition. We can make
that function conscious by pausing before we do a yoga posture to
envision the posture as a whole and move into it with ease.

When you learned how to throw a ball or swing a racket, you didn’t
analyze a sequence of muscles engaging. You looked where you wanted the
ball to go and imitated your teacher, an athlete or adept older kid. You
got a whole picture. Your eyes delivered that picture to your brain and
nervous system in a flash, and you did your best to fulfill the action
you saw. Over time, you practiced and got better at it, not from
analysis, but from keeping your eye on the ball and repeating a whole
body experience. When we see the objective of an action in the mind’s
eye, we are better able to engage the body’s complex, integrated
response.

Many people think that surface muscles – the back and superficial
abdominals – support upright posture. It’s nice to know where the abs
are and what they do, but here’s the big news: if the outside shell of
muscle is tense, the inner muscles fail to engage. Rather than working,
the core muscles actually inhibit, making the spine less spacious and
more vulnerable. Before we do something, the spine can enliven and
lengthen to prepare for our next move. When you understand this, it can
bring more ease and balance to your daily tasks and to the practice of
yoga.

Ways to Build the Core

Here are some ways in everyday movement and yoga to build a truly strong
core:

Standing – Whether waiting for a train or standing in tadasana,
Mountain Pose, notice whether your weight is more toward the front
of your feet or the heel. If you’re not centered, envision the top
of your head guiding you right over your feet. If it feels weird,
you’ll know you habitually stand back on your heels. Once you’re in
balance, central muscles naturally engage and upright poise can
become effortless.

Sitting – To sit well, envision space and ease where the spine
joins the head – a point between the ears. Balance your weight on
your sitbones, breathe easily and envision those little muscles
along the spine supporting you from within. If in yoga class you
find it a strain to sit with legs crossed, sit on a folded blanket
or bolster to make upright posture easier. Rather than lifting your
rib cage, let it be buoyant with breath.

Breathing – Believe it or not, a full easy breath is one of the
most accessible ways to improve your posture and engage your core.
Your lungs go from your shoulders to near the bottom of the
rib cage. Allow your breath to fill the whole torso, including the
back where you have more lung tissue.

Many yoga poses demand and can inspire core support. Here are just a
few:

Seated Spinal Twist – Allow your breath to support the easy
movement of your rib cage and shoulders as you wring out the waist.

Plank – When you do this pose in yoga class or at the gym, allow
your head to rotate slightly at the top of your spine. That will
allow the spine to lengthen and give this strong pose a foundation
of ease. Your core – you can’t do this pose without it – will engage
as needed.

Side Plank – In Vasistasana, allow that slight rotation as you
send the crown of the head away from the heels of your flexed feet.

Practice either of these plank variations as you hold a block between
your thighs to spark deep, genuine core support.

We’re not like an ice cream sandwich, with a slab of muscle on the front
facing another slab on the back. We are round and multi-layered, with
the largest muscles on the outside and the smallest deep within.
Isolating and overworking one surface muscle group is misguided. It’s
not how movement and function work. In fact, one part of engaging the
core is breathing fully and easily. You can think of your core as
beginning from the long arch in your feet, your inner heels and big
toes, and ending at the top of your head.

And please, don’t hold your abdominals. Remember that your body is
supported by a complicated, orchestral set of interactions that
harmonize when you envision your body working – as a whole. Enjoy your
new core.

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Joan Arnold

Joan Arnold brings to her teaching a long background in dance, yoga and bodywork. She is a Certified Teacher of the Alexander Technique and has maintained a private practice in NYC for 26 years. Also certified in Anusara yoga and Jessica Wolf's Art of Breathing, she helps people with a range of challenges relieve chronic pain, solve body problems and return to the activities they love. She has written for national magazines and web sites on dance, bodywork, alternative medicine and yoga.
Joan applies Alexander's elegant grammar of the body in her weekly yoga classes at Jaya Yoga Center in Brooklyn and offers Yoga & the Alexander Technique workshops at various studios in the Tri-State area. Each year, Joan presents her integrative approach to yoga students and teachers at Kripalu Center for Yoga & Health.
Learn more about Joan's transformational yoga work and the Alexander Technique at joanarnold.com.